| Literature DB >> 30945140 |
Christopher Kure Liu1, Paule Valery Joseph2, Dana E Feldman1, Danielle S Kroll1, Jamie A Burns1, Peter Manza1, Nora D Volkow1,3, Gene-Jack Wang4.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: We summarize neuroimaging findings related to processing of taste (fat, salt, umami, bitter, and sour) in the brain and how they influence hedonic responses and eating behaviors and their role in obesity. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Eating; Gustation; Neuroimaging; Nutrition; Obesity; Taste
Year: 2019 PMID: 30945140 PMCID: PMC6486899 DOI: 10.1007/s13668-019-0269-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Nutr Rep ISSN: 2161-3311
Fig. 1Brain activation patterns (overweight and obese > healthy controls) of taste modalities (bitter, salty, and fat) compiled from studies in Table 1. Red (fat taste): BOLD contrast (overweight > healthy controls) to high-fat, high-sugar milkshake in right insula/operculum, precentral gyrus, angular gyrus, bilateral precuneus, posterior cingulate (Bohon et al., 2017). Green (bitter taste): BOLD contrast (obese > healthy controls) to quinine-hydrochloride solution in insula, ACC, OFC, amygdala, putamen, pallidum (Szalay et al. 2012). Blue (salty taste): [18F-FDG] glucose metabolism (overweight and obese > healthy controls) following sodium chloride solution in insula, OFC, parahippocampus (Li et al., 2017). Pink: Overlapping brain activation in insula in response to fat, salty, and bitter tastes. Turquoise: Overlapping brain activation in OFC in response to bitter and salty tastes. Yellow: Overlapping brain activation patterns in response to fat and bitter tastes the numbers above the brain slices indicate the Z-coordinate in MNI space
Neural correlates of taste information processing in obese and overweight populations
| Authors (year) | Study group | Imaging task | Neural correlates in obese and overweight populations vs healthy controls |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fat taste | |||
| Bohon et al. (2017) | Visual food cue presentation of either chocolate milkshake or water | Greater BOLD contrast (milkshake > tasteless) in right insula, operculum, precentral gyrus, angular gyrus, bilateral precuneus, and posterior cingulate | |
| Babbs et al. (2013) | Tastant delivery of either milkshake or tasteless solution | Greater BOLD contrast (milkshake > tasteless) in ventral putamen | |
| Umami taste | |||
| Magerowski et al. (2018) | Visual food cue presentation that subjects rated on health and appetitiveness. | Greater BOLD contrast (MSG+ > MSG-) in left DLPFC and lower BOLD contrast (MSG+ > MSG-) in cerebellum, precuneus, and fusiform gyrus in women with high eating disinhibition | |
| Salty taste | |||
| Li et al. (2017) | Buccal administration of sodium chloride stimulus solution 40 min prior to scan | Greater glucose metabolism in insula, OFC, and parahippocampus | |
| Hardikar et al. (2018) | Tastant delivery of suprathreshold sucrose or sodium chloride solution | Weaker and shorter-latency gustatory-evoked potential to sodium chloride | |
| Bitter taste | |||
| Szalay et al. (2012) | Tastant delivery of either quinine hydrochloride or tasteless distilled water | Greater brain activation in ACC, gustatory cortex, OFC, amygdala, putamen, and pallidum | |
| Green et al. (2015) | Tastant delivery of either caffeine or sucrose solutions | Greater brain activation in pre- and post- central gyri, fusiform gyrus, insula, lentiform nucleus, putamen, and frontopolar cortex to caffeine and sucrose | |
| Sour taste | |||
| N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |